Dan Rather on pesticides & bees

Help start a national conversation on pesticides and bees by spreading the word about this hard-hitting, in-depth investigative report.

Dan Rather's investigative reporting team has produced a follow-up to their 2006 inquiry into Colony Collapse Disorder. Five years later, the situation remains substantively unaddressed by EPA.

Honey bees are still dying off at an average rate of 34% year, and the millions of dollars Congress set aside to investigate the issue has yielded no actionable findings for the federal agencies charged with stemming the tide of honey bee decline.

The report zeroes in on EPA's failure to adequately assess the toxicity of neonicotinoids, a class of pesticides widely considered by beekeepers to be a causal factor in the recent honey bee declines.

How [neonicotinoid pesticides] got onto the market illustrates, according to several scientists we spoke to both inside and outside the EPA, the real deficiencies of pesticide regulation in this country, and the questionable role of industry in these decisions. ...

Chemical companies say neonicotinoids are safe for bees. But scientists say: prove it. According to sources and our own investigations, the companies have yet to submit one acceptable field study of systemics on long-term impacts to honey bees since the new pesticides were allowed on the market in the mid-90's.

In December of last year, PAN and Beyond Pesticides worked with beekeepers to break the controversial story of EPA's fast track approval of the neonicotinoid pesticide clothianidin — despite evidence linking the pesticide to honey bee deaths.

pursual wrote:

2

OrganicGerry wrote:

Neo-nicotinoids are a serious problem, especially when abused.

But can you tell me, if we have been losing 35% of commercial hives per year for a few years now, statistically, we should have no commercial bees. Does this tell us that colony bee collapse is cause by something other than pesticides?

This number can no longer be considered realistic, even if they did or are dying off among some commercial bee keepers.

3

crownbees wrote:

Similar to the Gulf oil well mess with BP, their solution was to 1) cap the well, but secondly, also conduct two secondary shafts. The Chilean miner rescue was the same; 1 primary rescue shaft and 2 secondary shafts.

Crown Bees, a relatively new company is following the secondary native insect path with helping pollinate backyards and orchards with the gentle mason bee. Read more on our website: http://www.crownbees.com.

We can make a difference, but only if we proactively start raising alternate solutions NOW rather than wait 5 years when it's too late.